The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 17, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 23, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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TUB ARROW: TAIlL^UAH, INDIAN TERRITORY.
LOCAL NEWS NOTES
Events of the Week in and About Town.
Fairland is to have a telephone ex-
change.
S. K. Lewis was here from Dawson
last week.
Muldrow people ^re eating ripe
borne grown waterr*tlon .
The Methodist church at Spiro was
recently destroyed by tire.
The appraisers are at work in lia
mona, and the Herald is happy.
Tandy Adair of Sallisaw was bere
last week filing at the land office.
The Odd fellows of Vian are prepar
ing for a big celebration on the 28th.
There is talk of a branch Keeiy in-
stitute being established at Claremore.
Sunday vtss one of the warmest days
Tahlequah has experienced this season.
Old papers, in any quantity, for sale
at the Arrow office, 20 cents per hun-
dred.
The land office at Wewoka, Seminole
nation, was opened for business this
week.
Anything in our store that has a red
tag on it is a bargain—Richard &
McSpadden.
A splendid assortment of those high
class detective stories at 15 and 25 cents
at Hudson's.
W, W. Hastings of this city is billed
to speak at the big barbecue at West-
ville Aug. 27.
Muekogee's new canning factory has
the product of tifty acres nf toraaU«e
to begin with. '
Ice delivered daily to any part of
the city by the Tahlequah Light &
Power Company.
If you want ice or fuel ring up phone
41 and the Tahlequah Ice and Power
Co. will supply your wants.
The Ramona oil district promises
to be the most prolific of any yet op-
ened in the Cherokee nation.
The postoffice is one place where
everybody pays cash and there is never
any question as to the prices.
K. S. Hessey, an attorney from Clare-
more, was here last week attending to
business before the land office.
Ice is necessary in summer time.
The Tahlequah Ice and Power Co. will
be pleased to supply your wants.
We are showing a good Btrong line
of staple and fancy prints at popular
prices—Tahlequah Mercanttte Co.
, It Is not a regular red tag sale but a
system that we will keep up. So watch
for the red tags—Richards & McSpad-
den. \
The people of Madill are advertis-
ing a big picnic to come off there on
the 22d and 23d of this month. Among
other attractions they say tbey will
have an old time Mexican bull fight.
Prevented
By
(Wcuia
Ysoap*
Assisted by CUTICURA Oint-
ment, the great Skin Cure, and
purest and sweetest of Emollients.
For sunburn, heat-rash, tan,
freckles, pimples, blotches, black-
heads, red, rough, and oily skin,
bites and stings of insects; for
cleansing the hair and scalp of
crusts, scales, and dandruff; for
baby rashes, itchings, and chaf-
ings; for many sanative, anti-
septic purpose* that appeal to
mothers, as well as for all pur-
poses of the toilet, bath, and nurs-
ery, CUTICURA Soap, assisted
by CUTICURA Ointment, the
great Skin Cure, are priceless.
N. B. Complete External jnd Interna] treat-
ment for every Humor, from Pimples to Scrofula,
from Infancy to Age, consisting of CUTICURA
Soap, Ointment, and Pills, price, the set, On«
Dollar, may now be had of all druggists.
gold throughout the world. Cuticura Soap, jafc.. Oint-
Mit. JOe., Rnolvcnt,JOc. (In lonn of Chocolate Coated
PllJa, &*•. per rial of 60). I)epoU: Ixtridoti, *7 Charter,
houaa So. 5 Paria, A Rue de la Hal*; Boatoo. 137 Columbia*
Ave. PotterDrutf &Chetu. Corp.,Sui. Props.
tor "Kow to Preaerwe, Purify, aud Ikaulif/ the
ftkln, ttcalp, Hair, aud Hauda."
Pity we can't all be Igorotes this
warm weather; or at least adopt tbeir
mode of dress until cool weather ar-
rives.
The final and authentic figures of
the assessors' censr; of Oklahoma City
give the city a total population of
29,734.
And this is the way the Hh-
moria Herald sizes up the local field:
"Gas, gas everywhere ana not a bit to
burn."
The United States authorities at
Durant bave outlawed "B. B. Water,"
and Durant dealers can no longer sell
tbt stuff.
Sound kidneys are safeguards of
life. Make the kidneys healthy with
Foley's Kiduey Cure —Crew Bros ,
druggists.
Seven thousand claimants were last
week denied citizenship rights by Choc
tew Chickasaw citizenship court at
Tishomingo.
Alderson will petition Judge Clay
ton for incorporation. The town has h
population of 1,600, and 176 acres
its townsite.
A recruiting station has been op
ened in Tulsa, where recruits for in
fantry, artillery or cavalry service
will be received.
We cannot all be great but we can
all refrain, if we only will, from asking
that time worn question, "Is It hot
enough for you?"
Solid American silverware, guaran
ueed fur i'ica hundred years, and made
by Wm. liogers Mfg.' Co., for sale by
Knight & Hennight.
Oklahoma Citj's census shows
total population of 21*.270 Oklahoma
City admits having 2,270 negro citizens
Guthrie refuses to admit.
When other medicines have failed
take Foley's Kidney Cure. It has cured
when everything else has disappoint
ed.—-Crew Bros., druggists.
Within thirty days active construc
Hon will be started on the Kansas City
Oklahoma & Houston railroad be
tween South McAlester and Honey
Grove, Tex.
Miss Mary Wheat, who has been
holding a position in one of the lead-
ing Tahlequah stores, came in Sunday
for a visit with home folks.—Pryor
Creek Clipper.
Rev. W. T. Frteman of Tahlequah
spent a day or so in the city this week,
and preached two excellent sermons at
the Methodist church Sunday.—Stil
well Standard.
Foley's Kidney Cure purities the
blood by straining out impurities and
tones up the whole system. Cures
kidney and bladder troubles.—Crew
Bros., druggists.
An eight months old infant of A. C.
Booker,a South McAlester printer, fell
from the bed and was drowned in a
bucket of water sitting near by, one
night last week.
A. R. Bass, of Morgantown, Ind
had to gel up ten or twelve times in
the night, and had a severe backache
and pains in the kidneys. Was cured
by Foley's Kidney Cure.—Crew Bros.
The executive committee of the Con
federate Veterans' Association of In-
dian Territory has decided that the
nest annual meeting of the Confeder
ate Veterans will be held at Checotah
August 23 to 25, inclusive.
The Oolagah Star says that last sum
rner there was talk of running the Ver-
digris river through a wringer to see
whether it was wet or not. This sum
mer, however, there has been no trou
ble in diagnosing its case.
Do you want a sound liver, vigor-
ous digestion, strong healthy ktdneys,
regularity in the bowels? Take Prick
ly Ash Bitters. It has the medical
properties that will produce this re-
sult.
The business interests of the coun-
try rallied to the support of McKinley,
and now the tide has turned and the
same interests will support the Demo
cratic nominee, says the Vinita Chief-
tain.
If your brain won't work right and
you miss the snap, vim and energy
that was once yours, you should take
Prickly Ash Bitters. It cleanses the
system and invigorates both mind and
body.
Better get the first before building
the second. "Claremore people are
soon to drill another well near the
present radium well where a large
sanitarium will be erected to compete
with the $40,000 sanitarium now pro-
posed."
The people of Tahlequah are' for
1 ahlequah. They should oppose any-
thing that looks like an effort to dam-
age the trade of the town. Every per-
son living In Tahlequah is Interested
in the city and its welfare. The man
who tears down is a public enemy.
Nature touched by the hand of
genius has solved the natural eas
problem for Ardmore. There is not
a shadow of doubt but that there ex-
ists in the immediate vicinity of Ard-
more a supply of natural gas that will
fill every requirement of a city of
50,000 people, sayB the Ardmorite.
The Ramona Herald Is rejoicing.
Listen: "The gas franchise gran'<ed
to J. A. Simmons has run its course
and Ramona has slipped from the
grasp of a bankrupt who bad no fur
ther object nor aim than to peddle out
the contract to the highest bidder."
The Herald now advises local capital
to step in and handle the gas business.
A KIOWA INDIAN ROMANCE
Father Narka Hi* Daughter, Who Has Hoth
A Seminole nod Kiowa Allotment —
CJrv.iidchlUI Wry Fortunate.
Bello Conrd, chief of the Kiowa po-
lice, was before the courts In Musko-
gee last week with his Kiowa wife, who
is one of the finest specimens of Indian
womanhood that has been seen for
many a day, asklqg the courts to give
them the care and custody of Pauline
Cozard, the U.year-old daughter of
Bello Cozard, by his first wife, a Sem
inole. Pauline has been reared by
her grandmother. Her father went
away one time and left her mother and
two children. Stories came back that
be had married another woman and
then Pauline and her little brother
were taken to their grandmother, a
Seminole woman Mother and son
died and left the little girl. Cozard
had not remarried, as told, but had
become a prominent man of the Kiowas.
When he returned to his Seminole
home and found his wife dead went
back to the Kiowa reservation and
married the most beautiful young wo
man of the tri.;e. She waj with him
last week when he asked the courts
for possession of the child and seemed
as eager for her as did her father.
Little Pauline is particularly fortu-
nate. Her grandir' cber, Mrs. F. ko
naye. secured for her an allotment In
the Seminole nation, and her father
securcd one for her in the Kiowa
country. She has chosen to remain
with her grandmother.
••Do It Today."
The time vorn injunction. "Never
put off 'till tomorrow what you can do
today," is now generally presented in
this form: "Do it today." That is
the terse advice we want to give to
you about that backing cough or de-
moralizing cold with which you have
been struggling for several days, per-
haps weeks. Take some some relia-
ble remedy for it today—and let that
remedy be Dr. Boshee's German Syr-
up, which has been in use for over 35
years. A few doses of it will undoubt-
edly relieve your cough or cold, and
its continued use for a few days will
cure you completely. No matter how
deep seated your cough, even If dread
consumption has attacked your lungs,
German Syrup will surely effect a cure
as it has done before in thousands of
apparently hopeless cases of lung
trouble. New trial bottles, 25c; regu-
lar size, 76c. At Cherokee Drug Co.
Indian Agent's K. port
For the fiscal year ending June 30,
1904, the receipts in tbe Union Indian
Agency at Muskogee were as follows:
Total royalties, $410,837 59; total sale
of town lots, $551,(01.71; sale of maps,
$511,15; sale of property, $51 00 Total,
$966,001 45, divided as follows: Choc
taw-Chickdsaw coal, asphalt, rock,
timber, town lots and logs, $<170,140 84;
Chickasaw cattle tax, $23,225.53; Choc-
taw cattle tax, $5,361.75; Cherokee na-
tion, pasture, oil, gas. etc., $126,795 95
This more than doubles the receipts of
previous years.
SHINGLES
MOULDING
!
BUY YOUR
LUMBER
-OF-
ROUNDS & PORTER I
DOORS
WINDOWS
?
t
t
?
f
f
t
t
•> •
RING PHONE 85
If you want a good team and buggy, if
you want a good saddle horse, if you
want our bus to call for yru or your
baggage, if you want our transfer
wagon, or in fact if you want anything
in the livery or transfer line, we are
well equipped and will take plcasnre
in attending to your wants promt/1^
and aatlsfactorially. Ring us up . .
GARRETT'S STABLES
***■ ***« ****** ****** 4*444*4444 44*4*4**4.1 *4**
Hasrball Player* aud Foot Kacera
Louis J. Kruger, ex champion long
distance foot racer of Germany and
Holland, writes, Oct. 27, 1901: "Du
ring my training of eight weeks foot
races at Salt Lake City, in April last,
I used Ballard's Snow Liniment to my
greatest satisfaction. Therefore, I
highly recommend Snow Liniment to
all who are troubled with sprains,
bruises, or rheumatism 25c, 50c, $1.00
per bottle. Crew Bros., druggists.
Why Mufikofee Urowfl.
Experts now estimate the oil flow
from wells in the city limits of Mus-
kogee at 1,000 barrels daily. Even at
the present low price of oil this means
$700 per day or $21,000 per month of
new money for this city. And yet
some people wonder why Muskogee
grows.—Phoenix
No Spooujr liUMlnesa.
For chills, malaria, and biliousness
Cheatham's Laxative Tablets are cer-
tainly very fine. No bad effects as with
quinine. Then they are so convenient;
can carry them In my pocket and no
spoon is necessary. They are an ideal
remedy. Geo. Westiake. 25c a box.
Commissioner Joiles Resigns.
As the result of long continued and
most decided friction between Indian
Commissioner William A. Jones and
the secretary of the interior, the com
missioner has resigned and will shortly
leave for his home at Mineral Point,
Wis. Commissioner Jones has not
been at his desk for over three months,
but has been in Chicago and New
York opening bids for supplies for
various Indian agencies. The most
critical incident in the history of the
breach which has been widening be
tween tbe secretary and the commis-
sioner jince early in the winter was
the removal of General Pratt as super
intendent of the Carlisle Indian school
and likewise the subsequent removal
of several agents of tbe department in
Wisconsin by the secretary without the
knowledge of tbe commissioner. It is
not yet determined who will succeed
Mr: Jones as commissioner.
Dijcasc takes no summer
vacation.
If you need flesh end
strength use
Scott's Emulsion
summer as in winter.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT St BOWNE, Chembtt,
409.41$ Street, New York.
50c. and £1.00; all druggists.
Uood Spirits.
Good spirits don't all come from
Kentucky. Their main source is the
liver—and all the fine spirits ever
made in the Blue Grass State could not
remedy a bad liver or the hundred and
one ill effects it produces. You can't
have good spirits and a bad liver at
the same time. Your liver must be in
tine condition if you would feel bouy-
ant, happy and hopeful, bright of eye,
light of step, vigorous and successful
n your pursuits. You can put your
liver in tine condition by using Green's
August Flower—the greatest of all
medicines for the liver and stomach
and a certain cure for dyspepsia and
indigestion. It has been a favorite
household remedy for over thirty-five
years. August Flower will make your
liver healthy and active and thus in-
sure you a liberal supply of "good
spirits." Trial size, 2.5c; regulr bot-
tles, 75c. At Cherokee Drug Company.
lutllan Police.
Indian Agent Shoenfeit has mado
his appointments of Indian police lor
the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1904.
The Cherokee force is composed as
follows: Privates Jas. P. Thompson,
Tahlequah; Arthur F. Chamberlain,
Vinita; Samuel Edwards, Nowata;
Thomas P. Roach, Welling; William
M. Sunday, Owasso; R. Lee Wyly,
Tahlequah.
BARGAINS
IN TOWN PPOPEPTY
One four room house, with hall, two
porches, small barn and good well of
water. All under good fence. -
One four room house, brand new, lot
110x140, fenced.
One house and lot, fronting on Col-
lege^ street, north of Shawnee, lot
98x171
Two vacant residence lots, each fiOx
112, on Delaware street," in good neigh-
borhood.
Also the following for a limited time
only:
One house and lot, with all neces-
sary outbuildings, on Muskogee a venue
in North Tahlequah, -and one two
story brick business house due west of
C apitol building on Muskogee avenue.
All of the described property is pay-
ing a good percent on the prices asked
for it at the present time as an invest-
ment in monthly rents.
For prices, terms and a more full
description, call at
CHEROKEE LAND COMPANY
Fite Bld'g;., Over Jones' Furniture Store.
DIRECTORY.
INTERIOR DEPARTMENT.
vv A Jones Com. ofInd. AflV'rs
J Blair Shoenfeit Ind. Agent for I. T
J George Wright.. Ind. Inspector
Inrilgetttlon.
With its companions, heart burn,
flatulence, torpidity of the liver, con-
stipation, palpitation of the heart,poor
blood, headache and other nervous
symptoms, sallow skin, foul tongue,
offensive breath and a legion of other
ailments, is at once the most wide
spread and destructive malady among
the American people. The Herbine
treatment will cure all these troubles.
50c a bottle. Crew Bros,, drugglstB.
NORTHERN DISTRICT COURTS.
£e<LPhTA 01,1 Judge
^"7D0e Judge
C A Davidson Clerk
tI^8,°Per .".'.'.'"'pros'.' Attorney
WHDarrough MarBhal
January "ZZpNti*' vl«"«-October "•
Nowata—October 29, February 6 and April .">.
ApruVu'"**1 November 7, Febrvury 20 and
Aprtir!rre-N0Vember 21' Febrllary and
Miami—Xoyember 28, March fi and May 1.
Pryor Creek—DecemberMarch 13, Bay 8. •
Sallisaw—December 12, March 20 and May 15.
•ludgelawrence presiding: Nowata-Octo-
ber 4, Claremore, November 21: Miami. No-
nn'«hiTi,i 1. ^yrCreek, December ft; Table-
2i^{, S,?brvsry '20: Warch «; Sallisaw,
21*Pryo!:c?e°ek? May Sril #i Claremore. A<"'>
CHEROKEE NATION.
Tahlequah
W C Rogers. .. . . Cs,'h ?}
VcP^hvte • ••'.. As si sti . Cb I"r
I1!"** Treasure.-
Mwu^ive secretaries* 8' A " Cunnln«harn-
IIOARD OF EDUCATION.
isms
UNITED STATES OFFICIALS.
{iorif It V"Kan1?i: Commissioner
Herbert C Smith Clerk
? ««? Gr y .'.'.'Office Marshal
Arch Spears Constable
Hah. Postmaster
" s Uye Asst. Postmaster
CITY OFFICIALS.
£ . ..Mayor
8 I Mm-' Recorder
w a Marshal
yy A InonipHou Tn aiui^
j
i
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Hudson, Waddie. The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 17, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 23, 1904, newspaper, July 23, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136217/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.